

📐 Elevate your design game with the ultimate grid system bible!
This first edition bilingual manual by Josef Müller-Brockmann is a definitive guide to grid systems in graphic design, typographic layout, and 3D design. Highly rated with over 900 reviews, it offers foundational knowledge essential for both emerging and seasoned designers seeking to master structured yet dynamic visual communication.
| ASIN | 3721201450 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #35,197 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #3 in Book Design #16 in Typography (Books) #96 in Design & Decorative Arts |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (934) |
| Dimensions | 8.46 x 0.79 x 12.01 inches |
| Edition | Bilingual |
| ISBN-10 | 9783721201451 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-3721201451 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English, German |
| Print length | 176 pages |
| Publication date | October 1, 1996 |
| Publisher | niggli |
Y**M
Guide to editorial design
Very helpful as a reference for creating a personal portfolio and for learning the basics of editorial design.
F**S
Great read, highly recommend
This is a great book, a classic, and a must read for any graphic designer. Regardless of where you are as a designer, this information is either new to you or you've learned some variation of it somewhere. At my work place we don't do much page layout, but I wish we did. Although after reading it, I realize this type of grid system works for one page designs as well as multi-page. At first the instructions and the whole idea sounds a bit rigid but as you continue reading you begin to understand the infinite possibilities it gives you. Nowadays there's definitely a huge misconception about "Breaking the Grid". New designers and even some seasoned designers misinterpret that statement as "No grid at all". I'm not against breaking the grid, but there has to be an existing grid before you can break the grid, otherwise what are you breaking? So if you want to break the grid, you must still learn the grid. Margins don't qualify as a grid system. Another misconception is that you have to break the grid to create dynamic. That is also false. There is a such thing as dynamic use of the grid, and this classic book proves it. I love the grid and after reading this book, I recognize it more as I look at great design work. The layout system is such a fundamental part of being a graphic designer. Make sure you're making every effort to improve all the necessary skills. If you're looking for an improvement in your layout skills, read this book. It will stand the test of time for ages to come.
S**H
It’s important to read it through and then apply the knowledge during a second pass of the book
A Classic Book with basic but very very relevant for all Design Applications.
R**O
Ame este libro
C**O
El libro más hermoso
R**T
Very good; very basic
If you want to go from knowing nothing about grid-based graphic design to knowing something, this is your book: accessible, clear, and narrowly focused. It forcefully explains why grids are good, how to build them, and how to zero in on the right one for a particular purpose. It's hard to imagine a new designer who wouldn't improve after reading it. "Grid Systems in Graphic Design" is also old, short, and introductory. The author writes from a time when his preparation for a design project was to make sketches so detailed that they sometimes involved actually hand-drawing accurate copies of the typefaces he intended to use. On the subject of page proportions, he stresses the benefits of DIN sizes and moves on. His examples are great at demonstrating the clarity that comes from applying a grid to a single, flowing stream of content, but it would have been nice to have a few examples in which content has to be kept separate. A newspaper page often has 4-6 stories (plus ads) that all must be kept visually distinct. How do his "Systems" accomplish that within the grid? This book will teach what it says on the cover. Just don't expect it to do anything more. "The Elements of Typographic Style" by Robert Bringhurst is more wide-ranging, more up to date, and more important to have as a reference.
T**T
Wonderful way to draw
One thing I love about all the drawing books out now is there is something for everyone. I see things in terms of lines and mathematical equations and this book fit so well into how I draw. It was a bit hard to get used to English being on one page and German on the next, but overtime, that became easier to deal with. I almost wish they had put one of them first and then the next in the second half of the book. It might have made it easier to get through the first time. If you like to draw with mathematical brain or you simply like things to line up, (graphic designers this really is a good book to have in your arsenal) I would suggest getting a copy. It's heavy - it's hardback after all - but it's going to last a good long time. Well worth the money.
V**S
A MUST-HAVE
If there’s an essential reference for planning a layout on any kind of project that needs to be designed coherently, this is the book you must have. I won’t give you any hints—just buy it and enjoy it! Whether you’re a graphic designer, poster designer, photographer, or even an illustrator, you’ll find valuable insights. Learn to apply the principles, and you’ll be ready to succeed.
A**.
o livro é essencial
J**A
Grid Systems in Graphic Design: A Visual Communication Manual for Graphic Designers, Typographers and Three Dimensional Designers, 9th edition 2015, is no doubt a classic in the lore of graphic design and layout technique. A primer, textbook, and conceptual exposition all-in-one. We get a sense of how a message is conveyed through carefully laid design work as we read the many insights the book provides. It is all done with the clarity and conviction of a master in the field. The book is a must read for students and practitioners alike as it encapsulates an approach to design from which creativity may ensue. So fundamental is the logic of the tools proposed. On a negative note, the book is plagued with misprints, an unforgivable occurrence in any publication, let alone a work on typography and one by none other than Josef Müller-Brockmann. It does nothing for the good name of Niggli Verlag that such poor proofreading was tolerated. I am grateful that the publishers keep the book in print, but such a sloppy edition ought never to have made it to print unchecked. It reaches absurdity when, previous to another error, on page 94 we can read two different measurements for the same item: 5.6 cm in the English version of the text; 6,5 cm in the German. Furthermore, I am unaware if Herr Müller-Brockmann did not attach any importance to leaving orphans (single words on a line at the end of a paragraph), but I do know that it is a no-no of modern typography practice. Thus, I was puzzled to see numerous such orphans in the text of the book. Nevertheless, the mastery of the author is above all that. Though irksome to encounter, the misprints can be overlooked as one is engrossed in the significance of the text and illustrations. The book can be enjoyed both in the German original, and in the terse English translation as the book is bilingual. I heartily recommend it.
S**O
This book is written so well. Not only is it informative but also stylish. I would recommend it to anyone that does any sort of creative work.
A**R
Todo bien, a excepción de un pequeño daño en una de las esquinas del libro
S**L
This books it starts by setting the base of grid systems and finish with using them and show the possibilities of this great tool. It’s a must read if you are a graphic designer.
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